Supreme Court ruling on Trump tariffs
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The U.S. Supreme Court said President Trump exceeded his authority in using a 1977 law to justify a large swath of his tariffs, but that does not mean he’s now unable to slap tariffs on other countries’ products.
President Donald Trump said on Saturday that he will increase the global tariffs he imposed a day earlier to 15% from 10% following an adverse ruling at the Supreme Court.
Tariffs: Pressing ahead with his aggressive trade strategy despite suffering a major legal setback, President Trump said on Saturday that he would raise his new, global tariff to 15 percent. The move came a day after Mr. Trump took steps to replicate some of the punishing duties that had been struck down by the Supreme Court. Read more ›
President Trump previously said he would implement 10% global tariffs after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down his tariff policies.
The headline tariffs may have been knocked down but with fresh tariffs imposed, retailers are busy litigating as they look for ways to claim back higher duties paid.
The decision on the tariffs was made 6-3. So, how did each of the nine justices vote?
President Donald Trump said Saturday that he was raising the global tariff he wants to impose to 15%, up from 10% he had announced a day earlier
President Donald Trump withdrew his endorsement of Republican Rep.
About $3.3 billion in tariffs paid by Indiana importers is in limbo after the Supreme Court struck tariffs down. Will Hoosiers get that money back?
The Supreme Court decision striking down President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs has added a wrinkle to already complicated U.S.-China relations.
Trump vowed to press on with tariffs — including a new 10% global levy — after the Supreme Court ruled his sweeping duties exceeded presidential authority.View on euronews